We’ll forge ahead into our 36th consecutive year of Territorial Airwaves broadcasts, we have been inundated with email and message in a bottle requests regarding our archives.
So by popular demand, we continue our mini-series, visiting the “Lost & Found” department of Territorial Airwaves, sharing an eclectic mixture of “Lost & Found Hawaiian Sound” – Part 3.
Today, we’ll listen to rare out-of-print recordings from Territorial Airwaves archives.

We’ll forge ahead into our 36th consecutive year of Territorial Airwaves broadcasts, with a response to an incredible amount of email, text, and calls regarding our archives.
So by popular demand, we begin a new mini-series, visiting the “Lost & Found” department of Territorial Airwaves, sharing an eclectic mixture of “Lost & Found Hawaiian Sound”.
Today, we’ll listen to rare out-of-print recordings from Territorial Airwaves archives.

We’ll conclude our mini-series spotlighting the Hawaiian Renaissance of the 1970s.
We’ll remember how on March 22, 1977, Dr. George Kanahele, noted Hawaiian cultural scholar, addressed the Rotary Club of Honolulu on the subject of the resurgence of interest in Hawaiian music and culture that had been building in the State since the beginning of the decade of the 1970s.
Dr. Kanahele entitled his speech, “Hawaiian Renaissance”, thus giving a name to this cultural movement.
Subsequently, his entire speech was published in the Honolulu Advertiser, and the term “Hawaiian Renaissance” became the buzz word to describe the 1970s era of Hawaiian music.
Today, we’ll listen to more of our out-of-print recordings from the recorded legacy of the Hawaiian Renaissance.

We return to the decade of the 1970s, the period of Hawaiian music often referred to as The Hawaiian Renaissance, when Hawaii’s youth began a search for ethnic identity.
The return to grassroots music was led by traditionally influenced musicians such as Gabby Pahinui, the Sons of Hawaii, the Sunday Manoa, and Hui Ohana.
But there were many other performers as well, whose recordings are now out of print.
Today, we’ll listen to more of our out-of-print recordings from the recorded legacy of the Hawaiian Renaissance.